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PM Carney says 24 Sussex to be restored with fundraising campaign, design competition

PM Carney says 24 Sussex to be restored with fundraising campaign, design competition

Prime Minister Mark Carney's government plans to restore the prime minister's residence at 24 Sussex Drive by launching a national design competition and fundraising campaign. The prime minister said the winning design proposal will be announced by Canada Day next year. Carney said the heritage building is now in a critical state from decades of neglect, and he does not...

Ottawa nearing major projects deal with B.C. as Alberta closes in on West Coast pipeline proposal

Ottawa nearing major projects deal with B.C. as Alberta closes in on West Coast pipeline proposal

The federal government is on the cusp of signing a sweeping agreement with British Columbia on major projects, which could land as early as next week in parallel with Alberta’s proposal for a West Coast pipeline. But the Prairie province must reach a deal on a major carbon-capture project, called Pathways, at the same time as it submits its pitch...

Energy minister to name 5 priority power-line projects for federal backing today

Energy minister to name 5 priority power-line projects for federal backing today

News comes as Ottawa has set the ambitious goal of doubling Canada's electric grid by 2050. The federal government is expected to announce on Friday that it will prioritize infrastructure upgrades that would allow provinces to share excess electricity more cheaply and easily. Energy Minister Tim Hodgson is expected to highlight five power-line projects, or interties, that the federal government...

Nate Erskine-Smith rules out bid for provincial Liberal leadership, still considering run for city office

Nate Erskine-Smith rules out bid for provincial Liberal leadership, still considering run for city office

Outgoing Liberal MP Nate Erskine-Smith ruled out a run for leadership of the Ontario Liberal Party on Thursday, but said he is still considering a bid for municipal office. The Star reported last week that Erskine-Smith, 42, had discussed the possibility of running for Toronto city council with Mayor Olivia Chow. He said the topic came up “in passing” but...

70% of Ontarians think it’s time for a change at Queen’s Park, poll suggests

70% of Ontarians think it’s time for a change at Queen’s Park, poll suggests

Premier Doug Ford’s Progressive Conservatives remain the most popular party at Queen’s Park even though seven out of 10 Ontarians think it’s time for a change in government, a new poll suggests. The Abacus Data survey found Ford’s Tories at 41 per cent support, while the Liberals, who elect a new leader Nov. 21, were at 32 per cent. Marit...

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Atlantic Canadians are largely satisfied with the performance of the federal government, but notably less so with that of their provincial governments.

Atlantic Canadians are largely satisfied with the performance of the federal government, but notably less so with that of their provincial governments.

Provincial Government Performance: Results of our most recent Atlantic Quarterly© survey show that Atlantic Canadians’ satisfaction with each of their respective provincial government’s performance is low. In both PEI and NS, a majority are dissatisfied (55% and 59%, respectively), while in NB and NL there is a more even split between those who are satisfied (NB 35%, NL 28%) and...

Could Nav Bains and the Ontario Liberals beat Doug Ford? Our data suggests it's a possibility.

Could Nav Bains and the Ontario Liberals beat Doug Ford? Our data suggests it's a possibility.

The shine has gone off Doug Ford a little this year. And his government has some miles on the odometer. While Ford has surpassed the expectations of his critics in the past, time and circumstances may be catching up. Liberal chances will have a lot to do with how Ford comes across over the next couple of years. It’s very...



Opinion

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To govern is to straddle: How is Mark Carney going to manage simultaneous, competing priorities?

To govern is to straddle: How is Mark Carney going to manage simultaneous, competing priorities?

To govern is to choose, the old adage runs. The old adage is wrong. More often, to govern is to straddle. Politicians are disinclined to choose by nature, of course: left unsupervised, they will nearly always prefer guns and butter to guns or butter. But many of the most important issues do not lend themselves to binary, either-or choices. The...

Mark Carney’s Canada pitch to Alberta: Don’t mess it up

Mark Carney’s Canada pitch to Alberta: Don’t mess it up

Every good political campaign needs a slogan. Mark Carney may have handed one to the team that will be fighting for Alberta to resist the separatist option this October: “Canada: don’t mess it up.” In a wide-ranging news conference on Thursday, Carney was focused on looking back over his achievements of the past year, but the questions from journalists, naturally...

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Critics caution against ‘complex regulator with two heads’ for social media, privacy laws

Critics caution against ‘complex regulator with two heads’ for social media, privacy laws

Privacy experts warn the Liberal government’s proposal to create a “super regulator” to enforce laws governing social media and privacy legislation risks weakening Canada’s privacy protection regime by reducing the role of the federal privacy commissioner.

Transport Canada grounds Black Hawk helicopter that RCMP still has to pay for

Transport Canada grounds Black Hawk helicopter that RCMP still has to pay for

The RCMP is paying for a Black Hawk helicopter it can’t use and its border surveillance program has taken a hit after Transport Canada grounded the Mounties’ newest chopper because it appears to be offside with Canadian regulations, the Star has learned. The helicopter, which is registered in the U.S., was only allowed into the country for marketing demonstration tours...

Politician's Pen

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Greater Transparency Needed at the Canada Revenue Agency
Regulatory Predictability, Not Government Favouritism, Will Get Major Projects Built

Regulatory Predictability, Not Government Favouritism, Will Get Major Projects Built

Government House Leader Steven MacKinnon’s recent acknowledgment that new legislation may be needed to accelerate approvals for major projects is an admission of long-standing failure. Canada’s regulatory system for infrastructure and resource development has become slow, uncertain, and politicized. While Ottawa now speaks of one or two year approval windows and continues expanding entities like the Major Projects Office, deeper...



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High stakes and co-operation: Carney’s Alberta referendum message

High stakes and co-operation: Carney’s Alberta referendum message

Canada’s worth fighting for. Alberta does better together with the rest of Canada. And the Oct. 19 referendum in the province is a real choice that could bring on years of uncertainty for Alberta’s economy. None of those points, raised by Prime Minister Mark Carney at a press conference on Thursday, are groundbreaking. But together, the three parts are the...

Trump can choose to wreck the U.S. economy — but he won’t stop there

Trump can choose to wreck the U.S. economy — but he won’t stop there

What’s worse: That Donald Trump wants to break off trade with Canada, or that the U.S. president doesn’t want us to trade with anybody else? Never before as a country have we been so outraged into collective retaliation as we have by America’s rejection of us, its closest trading partner. But whatever we may think of America’s political trajectory, the...

Here’s what’s wrong with Carney’s ‘Canada Strong’

Here’s what’s wrong with Carney’s ‘Canada Strong’

Thanks to the Canada Strong Pass, Canadians can enjoy a more affordable summer. Valid from June 19 to Sept. 7, it provides free admission to all national historic sites and parks operated by Parks Canada, free or reduced admission at national and provincial museums and galleries and free and discounted travel with Via Rail.

Carney shifts to damage control on his condo developer bailout

Carney shifts to damage control on his condo developer bailout

Nobody could accuse Mark Carney of lacking intellectual suppleness. A week after enthusiastically endorsing the federal government’s involvement in moves to buy and convert up to 2,500 Vancouver condos that developers can’t unload, on Thursday the prime minister downplayed Ottawa’s role in the scheme. Article content At a press conference to mark the end of the parliamentary session, Carney said...

Mark Carney might be used to being the smartest guy in the room. That’s no guarantee of success in politics

Mark Carney might be used to being the smartest guy in the room. That’s no guarantee of success in politics

I imagine Mark Carney was something of an autocrat even in the cradle, issuing directives and insulting subordinates from the earliest age. “Yeah, I’m not feeling this WubbaNub. Got any others?” “This is not a helpful suggestion. Go back and rework it to a different nap time.”

Mark Carney has a grand unifying theory of the economy. Unfortunately, he’s not acting on it

Mark Carney has a grand unifying theory of the economy. Unfortunately, he’s not acting on it

Six years ago, Mark Carney set out to discover his own grand unified theory of everything — or, at least, of why houses became so expensive. Then the governor of the Bank of England, Carney thought there could be a way to align government and bank policy which, borrowing a phrase from Sir Isaac Newton, would “protect the economy from...



Fortress North America would imprison Canada

Fortress North America would imprison Canada

They are the behemoths that dot the European landscape. Giant fortresses that have stood for centuries. They were built as defensive bastions to withstand invasions and sieges. Over time, the very isolation, impregnability and fearsome scale of these fortresses suggested an obvious – if less noble – secondary use. And names like Peniche Fortress, north of Lisbon, Marseille’s Château d’If...

Canada remains vulnerable to surging world energy prices — and some of that is our fault

Canada remains vulnerable to surging world energy prices — and some of that is our fault

Inflation has surged to its highest level in years, Statistics Canada announced Monday, and we can rightly blame U.S. President Donald Trump and his war in Iran for the oil-fueled increase.

Carney’s ridiculous, myopic plan to bail out condo developers

Carney’s ridiculous, myopic plan to bail out condo developers

It is patently unfair that the Carney government has announced plans to bail out condo developers in British Columbia, without even a mention of the struggling venture capitalists in Ontario, the hedge fund managers in Quebec, and the corporate CEOs in Alberta.

Summer stakes are high for Carney, Poilievre, and Lewis

Summer stakes are high for Carney, Poilievre, and Lewis

Parliament has risen for the summer, and it is yet again a key time for political parties to tend to all-important local political concerns that ultimately drive the successes or failures of Members of Parliament. For Prime Minister Mark Carney and the Liberals—except for flag waving around the World Cup and big hopes that Canada goes on a run on...

Starmer’s resignation is a cautionary tale for Carney and Poilievre

Starmer’s resignation is a cautionary tale for Carney and Poilievre

To be a successful leader in politics, you need a few things: a vision for the country, a plan to realize it and an ability to articulate why you are the right person to lead the journey. British prime minister Keir Starmer possesses none of these things. That’s why he’s been forced to resign his post. It’s expected he’ll be...

Carney’s condo developer bailout is a hazardous look

Carney’s condo developer bailout is a hazardous look

In economics, the concept of “moral hazard” describes a situation where an individual or institution is more likely to take reckless risks because they do not bear the negative consequences of those risks. It is an idea with which Prime Minister Mark Carney is very familiar, having been a vocal critic of the claim that banks were “too big to...



Mark Carney’s flattery of Donald Trump is a game that needs changing

Mark Carney’s flattery of Donald Trump is a game that needs changing

Donald Trump must enjoy what has now become diplomatic protocol for dealing with him on the world stage — namely, flattery and deference. Mark Carney caught on to it early, calling Trump a “transformational president” during his first White House sit-down with him more than a year ago.

Starmer’s downfall is a warning to prime ministers who don’t deliver

Starmer’s downfall is a warning to prime ministers who don’t deliver

British prime ministers have for the past 65 years had their public image satirized in Private Eye magazine, an often-unflattering pastiche that generally finds its way into the mainstream culture. From the outset of his time in No. 10 Downing Street, Keir Starmer — who on Monday announced plans to resign — was portrayed as a dull, indecisive, overly cautious...

Is this the beginning of the end of the Doug Ford era in Ontario?

Is this the beginning of the end of the Doug Ford era in Ontario?

Ontario premier Dalton McGuinty was just one seat shy of securing a third majority mandate when he led his party to win the 2011 Ontario election. It wasn’t a great result – the Liberals won 18 fewer seats than they had the previous election – but it was still a win, and Mr. McGuinty’s approval rating was a respectable (for...

BC might have some grievances too

BC might have some grievances too

British Columbia is Canada’s third-largest province. It has the country’s fourth-largest economy. And right now, it might be the single most overlooked and underappreciated member of Confederation. Alberta’s willingness to indulge a separatist temper tantrum is consuming most of the attention that’s not already dedicated to dealing with Donald Trump, and it has already elicited a number of policy concessions...

Who's hurting Stampede? The politicians who claim the fun is gone

Who's hurting Stampede? The politicians who claim the fun is gone

On this date in 2013, much of Calgary's downtown was underwater from the greatest flood ever to hit southern Alberta. City hall, with provincial help, worked furiously to make the Calgary Stampede happen. A slimmed-down version opened on schedule. It was a stunning feat of united action by governments and the Stampede, then led by CEO Vern Kimball.

Farkas on fire, Danielle Smith pushes back — the Stampede tent brawl

Farkas on fire, Danielle Smith pushes back — the Stampede tent brawl

Crackle! Sizzle! Roar! Calgary Mayor Jeromy Farkas is on fire. "A permit is not a free pass to keep people awake for 11 nights because someone powerful demands it. "Rick, you spoke up for years. You were told to call 311. You were told to wait while people with money, access and powerful friends expected city hall to look the other way.



Cannabis producers give up trying to get Ottawa to stop smothering their business

Cannabis producers give up trying to get Ottawa to stop smothering their business

The Cannabis Council of Canada has announced it is suspending its advocacy operation, apparently because its member companies have given up hope that the federal government is prepared to listen to them. In a letter to Finance Minister François Philippe Champagne that foreshadowed this week's announcement, outgoing council president Paul McCarthy said the country's licensed cannabis producers have lost confidence...

Carney has the upper hand on Trump. This is how he got it

Carney has the upper hand on Trump. This is how he got it

Mark Carney knows how to work a room. Twenty years of top-level international summitry as a finance mandarin, central banker and prime minister have honed that skill. More important: Carney knows how to read a room. In Davos earlier this year, attendees wanted to hear some sort of plan to contain U.S. President Donald Trump’s escalating insanity. So the prime...

James Scongack, Catalyst for Change

James Scongack, Catalyst for Change

Most Canadians see Carney’s Trump flattery as a necessary evil — but they won’t see it that way forever

Most Canadians see Carney’s Trump flattery as a necessary evil — but they won’t see it that way forever

No prime minister has the luxury of being able to worry about a single problem. But among Mark Carney’s many problems, one looms particularly large: managing Canada’s relationship with the United States and its president. And Carney faces a difficult question on that file: How flattering to Donald Trump can he dare to be? We saw some examples recently of...

Some believe the U.S. will pull itself out of its current morass after the midterms, but hope is not a strategy

Some believe the U.S. will pull itself out of its current morass after the midterms, but hope is not a strategy

Many Canadians fervently hope that the next midterm elections will return the United States to a state of political normalcy. But there is simply too much money, too much fear, and too much potential for political retribution embedded in the system to expect a rapid correction.

How much are we willing to do to keep Alberta around?

How much are we willing to do to keep Alberta around?

A referendum is looming in Alberta, which will reveal this fall how far the province is ready to go toward the independence option. For the rest of Canada, a big question revolves around how much are we willing to do to keep Alberta in the federation. Some new polling by Abacus Data may offer some insights into that question and...

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Anand welcomes Turkish counterpart to Ottawa ahead of NATO summit in Ankara

Anand welcomes Turkish counterpart to Ottawa ahead of NATO summit in Ankara

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand is meeting with her Turkish counterpart in Ottawa today, ahead of the NATO summit next month in Turkey's capital Ankara. Turkish Foreign Affairs Minister Hakan Fidan is visiting Toronto and Ottawa after pitching a strategic partnership with Canada. Turkey is Canada's military ally by virtue of its NATO membership and Fidan has echoed the Canadian...

Canada signs deal with Qatar to strengthen public safety, address transnational crime

Canada signs deal with Qatar to strengthen public safety, address transnational crime

Canada has signed an agreement with Qatar that Ottawa says looks to address evolving security threats and strengthen public safety. Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree says strong international partnerships are essential to keeping Canadians safe.

Carney coming to Calgary Stampede, carrying message that separation is no magic wand

Carney coming to Calgary Stampede, carrying message that separation is no magic wand

Prime Minister Mark Carney is coming to next week's Calgary Stampede, and plans to reiterate that quitting Canada will not be the magic wand separatists think it is. Carney, taking questions from reporters in Ottawa on Thursday, said the fallout from the United Kingdom voting to leave the European Union a decade ago should serve as a clear cautionary tale.

Carney says he and Trump discussed defence priorities, Arctic ahead of NATO summit

Carney says he and Trump discussed defence priorities, Arctic ahead of NATO summit

Prime Minister Mark Carney said Thursday he spoke with U.S. President Donald Trump about efforts to protect the Arctic ahead of their attendance at the NATO summit in Turkey in two weeks. Carney said the U.S. president called him Wednesday for a "long discussion" that involved other senior officials, including U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. Carney said he and Trump...

Carney says having no embassy in Iran puts Canada at 'a disadvantage'

Carney says having no embassy in Iran puts Canada at 'a disadvantage'

As an Iranian diaspora group warns Canada could be looking to re-establish relations with Tehran, Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada is "at a disadvantage" in countries like Iran where it lacks a diplomatic presence. Commenting today on the deadly earthquakes in Venezuela, the prime minister said that not having diplomatic relations with Venezuela's government makes it hard to respond...

Carney says six upcoming byelections will likely be spread out

Carney says six upcoming byelections will likely be spread out

Prime Minister Mark Carney says the six byelections to fill current and upcoming vacancies in the House of Commons won't likely be held all at the same time. Carney said in French he has not yet decided when the byelections will take place, but he does have to account for factors like the provincial election in Quebec, scheduled for Oct...

Carney says B.C. condo buyout proposal is about affordability, not bailouts

Carney says B.C. condo buyout proposal is about affordability, not bailouts

Prime Minister Mark Carney says a proposal to convert unsold condo units in British Columbia into affordable housing is about supporting Canadians, not distressed developers.

Carney to make announcement on 24 Sussex Drive on Friday

Carney to make announcement on 24 Sussex Drive on Friday

Prime Minister Mark Carney says there will be an announcement on Friday about the future of 24 Sussex Drive. No prime minister has lived at the official residence of the prime minister since Stephen Harper in 2015. Carney currently lives at Rideau Cottage on the grounds of Rideau Hall. Carney was asked about what he would like to see happen...

‘It has to be a real deal’: PM Carney says ahead of trade talks with Trump

‘It has to be a real deal’: PM Carney says ahead of trade talks with Trump

Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada will work with the United States and Mexico to “modernize” the trilateral trade deal known as CUSMA, but won’t accept a bad deal from U.S. President Donald Trump. “We could sign a bad deal this afternoon. We could have signed a bad deal a year ago. We’re not going to sign a bad deal...

Carney announces fundraising campaign, design competition to restore 24 Sussex

Carney announces fundraising campaign, design competition to restore 24 Sussex

Company to design, build project expected to be chosen by July 2027. Prime Minister Mark Carney is expected to announce on Friday a long-awaited plan to restore 24 Sussex Drive that includes a fundraising campaign to come up with as much money as possible to pay for it, CBC News has learned. A senior government source said Carney's plan is...

Could Nav Bains and the Ontario Liberals beat Doug Ford? Our data suggests it's a possibility.

Could Nav Bains and the Ontario Liberals beat Doug Ford? Our data suggests it's a possibility.

The shine has gone off Doug Ford a little this year. And his government has some miles on the odometer. While Ford has surpassed the expectations of his critics in the past, time and circumstances may be catching up. Liberal chances will have a lot to do with how Ford comes across over the next couple of years. It’s very...

Canadian business leaders went to Japan to make deals. Here’s what they’re bringing home.

Canadian business leaders went to Japan to make deals. Here’s what they’re bringing home.

Record participation in a team-Canada trade mission to Japan has resulted in more than $1 billion in commercial investments signed between Canadian and Japanese companies. On Thursday, International Trade Minister Maninder Sidhu beamed as he watched executives from more than a dozen companies participate in signing ceremonies. Sidhu said the historic trade mission has delivered “landmark results” resulting in over...

Feds signed $5.4 billion in secret procurement contracts last year

Feds signed $5.4 billion in secret procurement contracts last year

The federal government signed $5.4 billion-worth of procurement contracts identified as “not for public disclosure” last year, the IJF has learned. In an email to the IJF, Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC) confirmed it was involved in awarding 1,896 contracts identified as “not for public disclosure” in the 2025/2026 fiscal year. This includes contracts awarded directly by PSPC or...

Search for survivors underway after Venezuela hit by back-to-back earthquakes

Search for survivors underway after Venezuela hit by back-to-back earthquakes

Death tolls are expected to rise this morning in Venezuela after two earthquakes struck near the capital, trapping people beneath the rubble of collapsed buildings and setting off powerful aftershocks.

Fast-tracked Alberta pipeline would face Indigenous consultation crunch: ‘I don’t believe it’s possible’

Fast-tracked Alberta pipeline would face Indigenous consultation crunch: ‘I don’t believe it’s possible’

Whichever route Alberta picks for its proposed oil pipeline to the B.C. coast, the federal government will have to do a swift but thorough consultation with Indigenous Peoples to avoid time-consuming court challenges, all with a looming separation referendum hanging over the process.

Carney’s Liberals would win another majority today despite trade war: The Signal

Carney’s Liberals would win another majority today despite trade war: The Signal

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Liberals would likely win another majority despite trade tensions with the U.S. and national unity concerns at home, polls suggest. According to The Signal, the Star’s poll aggregator, Carney’s Liberals, who currently have 173 MPs in the 343-member House of Commons, would win between 171 and 213 seats — with median tally of 191 — on...

Submarine executive says German bid more compatible with Canada because working language is English

Submarine executive says German bid more compatible with Canada because working language is English

A senior executive at German submarine builder TKMS says a joint proposal with Norway to supply 12 submarines for Canada would be more compatible with the country than a rival South Korean option, in part because the European vessel construction group’s working language is English. In a recent post on LinkedIn, the executive, Philipp Schön, said Canadians should consider which...

More relief from canola and seafood tariffs to be discussed between Canada and China in the fall

More relief from canola and seafood tariffs to be discussed between Canada and China in the fall

International Trade Minister Maninder Sidhu says more relief from Beijing’s tariffs that remain on Canadian canola, peas and seafood will be on the negotiating table when he meets with his Chinese counterpart in the fall. The meeting will likely take place in November in Shenzhen, GD. the site of this year’s Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Summit (APEC) hosted by China. Earlier...

Battle over 5-figure pay hikes for federal judges is causing unease in legal circles

Battle over 5-figure pay hikes for federal judges is causing unease in legal circles

The federal government and more than 1,000 federally appointed judges are at odds over the best way to settle an ongoing salary dispute, raising concerns in both the legal and political community that the case could end up tarnishing the judiciary's reputation. The government refused last year to grant judges a salary increase of $28,000 to $36,000, as proposed by an independent committee.

Ottawa said military would send sexual offence cases to civilian police. It retained nearly 70%

Ottawa said military would send sexual offence cases to civilian police. It retained nearly 70%

Military police failed to transfer almost 70 per cent of sexual offence cases over the past five years to civilian police, despite the government committing to doing so as it worked to pass a permanent change into law. New data shows military police held on to 595 out of 879 of these cases since 2021. "I find that disturbing to...

L3Harris blindsided by Ottawa bypassing competition for surveillance jet contract

L3Harris blindsided by Ottawa bypassing competition for surveillance jet contract

Defence contractor says their aircraft would create 1,100 maintenance jobs in Canada. One of the leading competitors to sell Canada early warning surveillance aircraft says it was caught off guard by the decision of Prime Minister Mark Carney's government to open contract negotiations with European defence giant Saab. Three companies — two American, one Swedish — were in the running...

Dozens of Liberal MPs expected to attend Calgary Stampede as Alberta referendum looms

Dozens of Liberal MPs expected to attend Calgary Stampede as Alberta referendum looms

Annual event comes just after a key deadline for federal-Alberta pipeline agreement. With the countdown to the Alberta referendum started, Prime Minister Mark Carney's governing caucus will be out in stronger numbers than usual at the Calgary Stampede. Dozens are expected in attendance, after months of lobbying by his few Alberta MPs. "This year, months in advance, I mentioned it...

These economists are worried Canada has a data quality problem

These economists are worried Canada has a data quality problem

Most economists, including at the Bank of Canada, were a bit surprised when Statistics Canada reported late last month that the economy contracted slightly over the first three months of the year. The consensus estimate among economists and monetary policymakers was for real GDP growth of roughly 1.5 per cent annualized in the first quarter. When the figures actually showed...

News, cultural groups want clarity on copyright after Ottawa releases AI strategy

News, cultural groups want clarity on copyright after Ottawa releases AI strategy

News and cultural industry groups are calling on the government to take a stand on how AI systems use copyrighted content after Ottawa's long-awaited national AI strategy failed to address the issue. The Liberal government released a strategy earlier this month which includes $2.3 billion in new and expanded funding and sets a goal of increasing Canadians' use of artificial intelligence.

Gun control group repeats call for end to sales of SKS rifles after Montreal shooting

Gun control group repeats call for end to sales of SKS rifles after Montreal shooting

A prominent gun control advocacy group is repeating its call for an immediate end to new sales of SKS rifles following deadly shootings in Montreal. Police have not identified the type of firearm used to kill Montreal police officer Mohamed Lamine Benredouane and civilian bystander Michel Mizrahi this week. But images circulating online indicate a long gun lying on the...

Canada won’t drop fees on big American streaming services

Canada won’t drop fees on big American streaming services

The Trump administration has explicitly opposed any such charges levied against the big streaming firms, most of which are U.S.-based giants. Broadcasters and online streaming giants will still have to pay a fee to support Canadian media production despite the Carney government’s declaration it would reverse course on the so-called “Netflix tax,” the Star has learned. Amid ongoing Canada-U.S. trade...

Democrat blames Trump for delayed bridge opening in new political ad

Democrat blames Trump for delayed bridge opening in new political ad

The delayed opening of the Gordie Howe International Bridge is now an issue in a closely watched Michigan Senate race as a Democrat hopeful blames the pause on U.S. President Donald Trump. In an ad launched Wednesday, candidate Mallory McMorrow says Trump won't open the Gordie Howe Bridge and accuses him of taking money from a billionaire family that owns...

Conservative MPs launch fundraiser for LGBTQ+ refugees

Conservative MPs launch fundraiser for LGBTQ+ refugees

Two Conservative MPs say leading a fundraising cruise for LGBTQ+ refugees is a tangible way for the party to advance the rights of gender and sexual minorities. "We're all God's creatures and we're all loved, and we all deserve to be loved and we all deserve to feel safe and secure," Scott Aitchison told The Canadian Press. "I believe that...

Carney's office offers few details on call with Trump before NATO summit

Carney's office offers few details on call with Trump before NATO summit

Prime Minister Mark Carney spoke with U.S. President Donald Trump today in advance of the NATO summit next month. Carney's office issued a one-sentence statement about today's call that does not say what the two leaders discussed. Turkey will host the annual summit July 7 to 8 in its capital Ankara. The summit comes after Trump launched a costly war...

Carney announcing decision on future of 24 Sussex in coming weeks: sources

Carney announcing decision on future of 24 Sussex in coming weeks: sources

Prime minister has said he wants to see his successors at the historic official residence. Prime Minister Mark Carney is expected to announce the government's long-awaited decision about the future of 24 Sussex Drive in the coming weeks, sources tell CBC News. The derelict residence is meant to house Canada's prime ministers, but the 34-room home has been sitting vacant...



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Supreme Court clears way for Trump administration to revive restrictive immigration policy

Supreme Court clears way for Trump administration to revive restrictive immigration policy

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court cleared the way Thursday for the Trump administration to potentially revive an immigration policy once used to turn back migrants seeking asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border.

Senate Republicans reject war powers resolution after Trump berates them at Capitol meeting

Senate Republicans reject war powers resolution after Trump berates them at Capitol meeting

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Senate Republicans who were berated by President Donald Trump over opposition to his war in Iran held a late-night vote Wednesday to try to appease him, rejecting a war powers resolution a day after a similar measure passed.

Trump's showdown with Republican Sen. Cassidy: Inside the blow-up on Capitol Hill

Trump's showdown with Republican Sen. Cassidy: Inside the blow-up on Capitol Hill

WASHINGTON (AP) -- "Would you really like to know?" Sen. Bill Cassidy asked President Donald Trump.

Trump refuses to sign bipartisan housing bill into law. What does that mean for homebuyers, renters?

Trump refuses to sign bipartisan housing bill into law. What does that mean for homebuyers, renters?

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A sprawling legislative package aimed at lowering the cost of housing and spurring more home construction won bipartisan approval from Congress this week, but it's hit a major roadblock in becoming law: President Donald Trump.

International

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Anand welcomes Turkish counterpart to Ottawa ahead of NATO summit in Ankara

Anand welcomes Turkish counterpart to Ottawa ahead of NATO summit in Ankara

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand is meeting with her Turkish counterpart in Ottawa today, ahead of the NATO summit next month in Turkey's capital Ankara. Turkish Foreign Affairs Minister Hakan Fidan is visiting Toronto and Ottawa after pitching a strategic partnership with Canada. Turkey is Canada's military ally by virtue of its NATO membership and Fidan has echoed the Canadian...

Carney says having no embassy in Iran puts Canada at 'a disadvantage'

Carney says having no embassy in Iran puts Canada at 'a disadvantage'

As an Iranian diaspora group warns Canada could be looking to re-establish relations with Tehran, Prime Minister Mark Carney says Canada is "at a disadvantage" in countries like Iran where it lacks a diplomatic presence. Commenting today on the deadly earthquakes in Venezuela, the prime minister said that not having diplomatic relations with Venezuela's government makes it hard to respond...

Search for survivors underway after Venezuela hit by back-to-back earthquakes

Search for survivors underway after Venezuela hit by back-to-back earthquakes

Death tolls are expected to rise this morning in Venezuela after two earthquakes struck near the capital, trapping people beneath the rubble of collapsed buildings and setting off powerful aftershocks.

Carney says goodbye to close ally, 'friend' as British PM Starmer says he'll resign

Carney says goodbye to close ally, 'friend' as British PM Starmer says he'll resign

Prime Minister Mark Carney is saying goodbye to his British counterpart after the two met repeatedly to discuss a shared vision for western countries. Conceding that he had lost the support of the party membership, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced Monday he will resign once his Labour Party chooses a new leader. "Throughout, and in the face of exceptional...

Keir Starmer announces resignation as U.K. prime minister as Burnham confirms bid to succeed him

Keir Starmer announces resignation as U.K. prime minister as Burnham confirms bid to succeed him

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said Monday he is stepping down as leader of the governing Labour Party and will leave office within weeks, forced out by his own party scarcely two years after being elected in a landslide. Starmer says he will remain caretaker prime minister until the party chooses a new Labour leader -- with expectations growing that...

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Power and peril – How Chinese EVs, solar systems, and embedded technologies threaten Canada’s national security

Power and peril – How Chinese EVs, solar systems, and embedded technologies threaten Canada’s national security

China continues to find creative ways to infiltrate and influence the West. When low-cost Chinese electric vehicles entered Western markets, they were an immediate success and sales soared. Soon after, engineers discovered that Chinese manufacturers could surveil these vehicles (Financial Times 2026). Western engineers also found kill switches in Chinese electric buses that could be used to disrupt transportation (Associated...

How Canada’s skilled immigration system went off the rails – and how to fix it

How Canada’s skilled immigration system went off the rails – and how to fix it

Express Entry was never meant to be a Canadian skilled immigration program. It was supposed to be the sorting system layered on top of the existing federal ones.


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A collection of SubStack publishing within Canadian public affairs.

Canada's bad boy of freedom of information

Canada's bad boy of freedom of information

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s own department, the Privy Council Office (PCO), has become the bad boy of freedom of information in Canada.

The black hole devouring cabinet records

The black hole devouring cabinet records

Secrecy surrounding cabinet documents is so absolute in Canada that critics look to theology and astrophysics for metaphors to describe it. Federal cabinet records in Canada are treated as “sacred artefacts to be shrouded in mystery for decades, hidden in a black hole beyond the contemplation of judges, commissioners, or citizens.”

The Opposable Prime Minister

The Opposable Prime Minister

In 2007, Roger Martin, then dean of the Rotman School of Management at University of Toronto, wrote a book called The Opposable Mind. It argued that the most successful leaders tend to be “integrative thinkers,” by which he meant they tackled problems holistically rather than breaking them down into component parts. Instead of seeking trade-offs, they are at ease with...

Podcasts

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Canada is no stranger to misogyny. Why haven't we changed that?

Canada is no stranger to misogyny. Why haven't we changed that?

A more than 100-page manifesto filled with misogynistic and anti-police rhetoric was found in the hours after an Alberta man opened fire in a Montreal neighbourhood. Three people were killed, including an officer, the shooter and a civilian caught in the cross-fire. This isn't the first Canadian shooting attack rooted in misogynistic ideology, it succeeds the 2020 Nova Scotia shooting...

Solving the Nord Stream attack mystery

Solving the Nord Stream attack mystery

In the fall of 2022, Danish authorities scrambled fighter jets to investigate a strange disturbance in the Baltic Sea. What they found was extraordinary. An enormous geyser had opened up on the water’s surface. It was evidence that something deep below had ruptured with enormous force. Just days earlier, a team of divers had planted explosives along Nord Stream, a...

Will it be a cruel summer for Carney or Poilievre?

Will it be a cruel summer for Carney or Poilievre?

With the summer now getting started, a series of new polls suggest that Mark Carney’s Liberals are starting the season in a good spot, while Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives can’t seem to get any momentum going. Will the summer months provide a respite to the two parties, or could it prove to be a cruel summer in the polls for either...

The ‘valley of death’ for Canadian businesses

The ‘valley of death’ for Canadian businesses

Canadian businesses don’t have an innovation problem – they have a growth funding problem. Small- and medium-sized businesses often find themselves in what’s known as the ‘valley of death’ – the crucial time when a business is ready to grow, but can’t access the funding they need to get to the next level.